Police charged three New Jersey men with running a narcotics production facility located in a luxury apartment in Harrison, State Attorney General Gurbir Grewal announced earlier in the day.

Although authorities took down what they called one of the largest heroin and fentanyl mills in the state, the Bergen County Prosecutors Office warned that the drugs could still be making their way into addicts’ veins throughout the county.

There were five fatal overdoses in Bergen County in 2018 involving drugs stamped with “Blue Magic,” “Tom Brady,” “Panda” and “ElChapo,” prosecutors said.

Four non-fatal overdoses the same year involved narcotics with the stamps “Tom Brady,” “Hellcat" and “Bad Apple," officials said.

The Tom Brady stamp was specifically mentioned during the Grewal’s press conference Thursday, but the attorney general said there could be “knock-offs” in the state.

“There are of course knock-offs," he added. "If someone is selling a ‘Tom Brady’ stamp, that does not prevent someone else from mimicking the ‘Tom Brady’ stamp. And that’ll be the challenge as we begin to unpack the next investigative steps.”

Anyone who encountered any of the drugs with the stamps linked to any of the Bergen County overdoses was told they could turn them in with “no questions asked,” Acting Bergen County Prosecutor Dennis Calo said in the release.

“If anyone encounters any of these stamps, we ask that you contact local police,” he said. "As part of our Heroin Addiction Recovery Team program, individuals can turn in drugs and paraphernalia with no questions asked.”

People seeking help, who have “personal use quantity of narcotics or drug paraphernalia on their person,” will not be charged if they turn them in, prosecutors said.